The Atba-i-Malak jamaat (community) are a branch of Taiyabi Mustaali
Ismaili Shi'a Islam that broke off from the mainstream Dawoodi Bohra
after the death of the 46th Da'i al-Mutlaq, under the leadership of
Abdul Hussain Jivaji in 1891. They have further split into two more
branches, the Atba-e-Malak Badar and Atba-i-Malak Vakil. The
Atba-i-Malak jamaat/community is based in Nagpur, India. [1]
History of the Imāmī-Atba-ī-Malak Bohras[edit]

The historical emergence of the Shī‘ah Imāmī
Tāyyībī-Mustā‘lī Atba-ī-Malak-Ismā'īlīs

The schematic history of the development of the Imāmī-Mustā‘līan
Atba-ī-Malak Bohras from other Shī‘ah Muslim sects

Wahb

Barrah

Fatimah

Abdul-Muttalib

Natīla

Aminah bint Wahab

ʿAbd Allāh

Asad ibn Hashim

Fatimah bint Qays

‘Abbas

Khadija bint Khuwaylid

Muhammad
(Family tree)

Abi Talib

Fatimah bint Asad

ʿAbd Allāh

Fatima Zahra

Ali al Murtaza
(Family tree)

Khawlah b. Ja'far al-Hanafiyyah

ʿAli bin ʿAbd Allāh b. ‘Abbas

Hasan al Mujtaba

Husayn ibn Ali (Family)

Shahr Banu

Ibn al-Hanifiyyah

Fatimah bint Hasan

Zayn al-'Abidin

Jayda al-Sindhi

Kaysanites
(Al-Mukhtar)

Farwah bint
Al-Qasim ibn Muhammad

Muhammad al-Baqir

Zayd ash-Shahīd (Zaydiyyah)

First Sufi
Abu Hashim (Hashimiyya)

Ja'far al-Sadiq

Yemen-Fivers

Zaydi-Alavids

Muhammad "al-Imām"

Isma'il ibn Jafar

Al-Aftah
(Aftahiyya)

Al-Dibaj
(Sumaytiyya)

Musa al-Kadhim

Ibrāhim ibn Ali ibn ′Abd Allah

Imāmī Ismā'īlīsm

Muhammad al-Aftah

Ibrāhim ibn Mūsā

Imāmī Athnā‘ashariyyah

Muslim’īyyah (Sīnbād)

Al-Maktūm
(Mubārakʾiyya)

Seveners

Fātimā al-Ma‘sūmah

Ali al-Rida

Ishaq al-Turk

ʿAbadullāh (Wafī Aḥmad)

Ḥamdān Qarmaṭ'l-ʾAšʿaṯ

Al-Tustari
(Taṣawwuf)

Muhammad al-Taqī (Jawad)

Muhammerah (Muqanna)

Aḥmad (Taqī Muhammad)

Abū Sa'id

Mūsā al-Mūbārraqā

Ali al Hadi

Khurrāmīyah (Pāpak, Maziar)

Ḥusayn (Raḍī ʿAbdillāh)

Abū-Tāhir

Muhammad ibn Ali al-Hadi

Hasan al-Askari

Kızılbaş

Ubayd Allāh (Fatimids)

Qarmatis

Nāimī-Ḥurūfīs

Ibn Nusayr (‘Ulyāʾiyya)

al-Qāʾim

ʿAlī Al-Aʿlā (Baktāsh’īyyah)

Muhammad
(Imām Zāmān)

Al-Khaṣībī (Nusairis)

al-Manṣūr

Pasīkhānī (Nuktawiyya)

Imamiyyah (Twelvers)

Sarı Saltuk (Baktāshīs)

al-Muʿizz

Nasīmī

Ja'faris

Alevis

Otman Baba

al-ʿAzīz

Akhbaris

Shaykhis

Usulis

Balım Sultan

al-Ḥākim

Safavids (Safavī Iran)

Nuqta-yi Ula (Bábis)

Velayat-e-faqih (Iran, Islamic Rep.)

Gül Baba (Hurufi-Bektaşi)

al-Ẓāhir

Durzis
(Al-Muqtana)

Mírzá Yaḥyá (Azalis)

Mírzá Ḥusayn (Bahá'ís)

Other Alevis (Bektashism)

Al-Mustanṣir bi-Llāh

Dā'ī Nasir Khusraw

Badakhshan & Afgan Pamiris

Yarsanis
(Sultan Sahak)

Al-Musta'li (Musta'lis)

Muḥammad ibn Abū Tamīm

Al-Nizār
(Nizārīs)

Ostad Elahi
(‘Ali-Ilahis)

Al-Āmir

Hashshashins (Ḥ. bin Sabbah)

Işık Alevis

At-Tayyib (Tayyibis)

Al-Ḥāfīz (Hafizis)

Ḥasan ʿAlā (Alamūt Nizārīs)

Alians
(Demir Baba)

Harabatis
(Baba Rexheb)

Arwa
al-Sulayhi

Zoeb Musa (Dawoodis)

Agha Khans (Nizārī Ismā'īlīs)

Pamir Ismāʿīlīsm

Chepnis

Sulayman (Sulaymanis)

Ali bin Ibrāhim
(Alavi Bohra)

Hebtiahs Bohra

A . Hussain Jivaji
(Atba-i-Malak)

Jafari Bohras (Syed Jafar Ahmad Shirazi)

Progressive Dawoodis (Asghar Ali)

Atba-i-Malak Vakil (A. Qadir Ebrahimji)

Atba-i-Malak Badar (Ghulam Hussain Miya Khan)

See also[edit]

Atba-i-Malak and Shia Islam

Alavi Bohra
Atba-e-Malak Badar
Atba-i-Malak Vakil
Dawoodi Bohra

Progressive Dawoodi Bohra

Hebtiahs Bohra
Patani Bohras
Sulaymani Bohra
Sunni Bohra

References[edit]

^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2001-03-06. Retrieved